Blending seasons

For what i saw on the magnetosphere site, LISS. The wobble has gotten stronger and more violent. We see temperatures differences within a small country as the Netherlands. Weather getting more unpredictable. My feeling that this week the steps for the 8 of 10 have been set in motion. But my feeling is also that this stronger wobble is the key of a faster progress of the 7 of 10. Could the Zetas say something about this, are we seeing signs that the 8 of 10 has been set in motion (erratic wobble, more signs of the blending of the seasons, plate movements increasing)?

Early in the ZetaTalk saga we predicted increasingly erratic weather and high tides, while not giving any particular cause for these phenomena. These predictions were made in 1995-1999, yet the cause of a vertical jet stream and increasing drought and deluge and temperature extremes did not become evident until 2004, when the Earth wobble could be well documented. Likewise, we have been predicting that the seasons will blend into one another, without giving a cause. Within the past year or so the wobble has at times taken on different characteristics - a temporary lean to the left or into opposition. During the dance the Earth undergoes with Planet X and the other planets caught in the cup, such maneuvers are erratic, and can come and go seemingly unpredictably.

But a wobble pattern that includes more frequent leans into opposition will produce more sunlight for the northern hemisphere. And a wobble that includes the N Pole of Earth attempting to escape the N Pole of Planet X by leaning away from the approaching Planet X will produce more sunlight for the southern hemisphere. And a wobble that includes a temporary lean to the left will result in an even basking in sunlight for both hemispheres. Should this ensue, in addition to the current Figure 8 wobble that has been in place since early 2004, a blending of the seasons would surely follow. As Planet X comes ever closer, and the magnetic dance is less like the waltz and more like rock and roll, the weather will become more erratic, the tides more extreme, storms arising suddenly, and all of this unpredictable.

Winter Storm Regis is due to hit the east coast on the first day of spring tomorrow, bringing a mix of rain, sleet and snow after record-setting highs earlier this month.

The Appalachian mountains and areas of the north east near Cape Cod, Massachusetts, are expected get up to eight inches of snow.

Major cities such as New York, Boston, and Philadelphia may see just a light dusting, with temperatures dropping across the board and wintry conditions extending into Monday.

Winter Storm Regis, which has already dumped more than 10 inches of snow in Colorado, will move east and graze the coast with five to eight inches expected near Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Most major cities will get a light dusting of about one to three inches

On Sunday, temperatures will drop, causing wet and wintry conditions ranging from rain to slush

Snow will graze the coast from Rhode Island up to Maine on Monday. Drivers should take extra care during their morning commute with wet and snowy road conditions to be expected

Meteorologists had trouble pinning down their forecasts, and previous predictions saw more serious conditions with snow reaching up to a foot. Although the threat of the storm has dimished, conditions will prove to be unpleasant after an unusually warm and dry winter.

Meteorologists are having trouble pinning down their forecasts, but it is safe to say conditions will take a turn for the worse after temperatures reached into the 80s just earlier last week.

Disregarding Winter Storm Jonas in January this year, New York's Central Park has received only 4.8 inches of show, making it the least snowy season in 14 years.

December 2015 to February 2016 is now listed as the warmest winter since records were kept in 1880, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Regis has already dumped more than 10 inches of snow in Colorado, and Interstate 80 in Wyoming was briefly shut.

Snow expected in New York as nor'easter comes to east coast

As the storm moves east across the country, temperatures from northern Virginia to New Jersey will drop by Saturday night with the possibility of wet, icy snow.

By Sunday, snow is expected to continue in the Appalachian mountains. Areas of New England, including Cape Cod, Nantucket Island, Martha's Vineyard and possibly eastern Long Island will also be hit with snow.

Regis will continue into Monday, with snow and strong winds along the eastern seaboard from the coast of Rhode Island up to Maine.

Drivers on the east coast should be careful on their Monday morning commute.

The European weather model, which differed dramatically from the American forecasting map, predicted heavy snow showers across the East Coast into next week

While the American model is historically less accurate, it looks like Winter Storm Regis is shaping up to be less of a serious threat

Forecasters have revised earlier warnings that predicted serious conditions with snow reaching up to a foot.

The outlook varies greatly depending on whether forecasters favor the European weather model, or the American weather model.

The European map, which is historically more accurate because it is generated using a powerful supercomputer, predicted heavy snow across the East Coast

The American model, which has been catching up in recent years thanks to technology improvements seems to have won out this time with its mild forecast.

It has so far been a largely warm and dry winter for much of the East Coast, with the exception of Jonas which dumped feet of snow on major cities including New York (pictured)

This winter has been one of the warmest and driest on record for much of the region, with March temperature highs smashed just a week ago as cities enjoyed heat of more than 80F.

But thanks in part to one of the strongest El Nino systems on record which disrupts established weather patterns, there could be one last Nor'easter on the way before spring kicks in.

By the middle of next week, temperatures along the east coast will shoot back up again into the 60s and 70s.

I was just listening to the MSM explanation of an "unusual arctic low, a polar vortex, blah blah blah..." they should just say it - "its a giant earth wobble!" If you watch the weather maps today showing this weather pattern from the arctic coming down into the United States its not hard to picture how the wobble is shifting the giant blob of cold air around. We nearly hit 70 degrees a few days ago...today we were around 9 degrees.